Paper
3 March 2003 Eclipse architecture
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Eclipse instrument concept is being optimzed to produce direct images of cool Jovian planets around several hundred candidate nearby stars, and consists of matched large telescope, wavefront sensing and control, and coronagraphic camera modules. Designed to fully comply with a Discovery Program budget and schedule, it operates in a wavelength band from 550 nm to 950 nm, and includes an unobscured telescope 1.8m in diameter. Spaceborne direct exoplanet imaging is now practical through deformable mirror (DM) technlogy that permits a hundred-fold or more quasi-static correction of a Hubble Space Telescope level primary mirror surface error at the mid-spatial frequencies that scatter starlight over its planet. Due to the stability of the spaceborne environment, wavefront error sensing can be accomplished in calibration runs preceding planet observation. Eclipse development is aided by a JPL testbed including many attributes of the flight article, and by validation of diffractive propagation algorithms that define system performance. As such, Eclipse both may serve as a pathfinder for envisioned larger instruments for terrestial planet finding, and provide the first sensitive survey of nearby planetary systems. Eclipse is in the process of definition and design, and the results shown here may be modified with further analysis and design. The emphasis of this paper is our approach to the Eclipse Space Element, and the definition of a checklist of features for coronagraphic design. The ground element, and specific devices and algorithms, and the next stages of design will be subjects of future papers. It is not sufficient to design a system capable of providing 10-9 contrast. A coronagraphic system must have sufficient stability that this level of contrast can be maintained over a reasonable observing interval.
© (2003) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Tony Hull, John T. Trauger, David C. Redding, and Joseph J. Green "Eclipse architecture", Proc. SPIE 4860, High-Contrast Imaging for Exo-Planet Detection, (3 March 2003); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.457881
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KEYWORDS
Coronagraphy

Space telescopes

Telescopes

Wavefronts

Mirrors

Cameras

Calibration

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